Archive for the 'Technology' Category

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Nothing is ever easy

So it would seem triple-booting Vista, XP, and Ubuntu isn’t as easy as I thought it would be. If you’re not a technologically-oriented person (or if you get bored after reading three paragraphs), you’d better give this post a wide berth. Also note that this is not really a tutorial. I simply stumbled through this situation all on my own and take no responsibility for the pain you might feel when you nuke your computer and hit your head repeatedly on the keyboard because you did what I did.

All right, so, because I’m a geek, I decided to take it upon myself to put not one, not two, but three operating systems on my laptop. It started when I got a new hard drive and completely wiped all the Dell crap off of it so I could install Vista and Ubuntu. I couldn’t do this before because I had some weird partitioning going on with my hard drive due to the presence of Dell MediaDirect. As such, I couldn’t make enough partitions (one primary for the OS and one extended/logical for swap space) to put Linux on. After nuking MediaDirect, I was able to get things started. This was easy. Vista was already installed, so all I had to do was make some space and pop in the Ubuntu Live CD. It installed GRUB (the Linux bootloader), which automatically picked up Vista and let me boot to it just fine.

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The hype is right

Call it the Snakes on a Plane effect. Something gains immense popularity based solely on hype. Everyone thinks it’s going to be amazing, but none of those people have any actual evidence of that something’s awesomeness. Good examples are the movie Snakes on a Plane (much ballyhooed by teh Interweb but sucked massively), politician Ron Paul (acts like a libertarian, but is just as anti-everything as the next Republican), and the recently released iPhone.

Surprisingly, the iPhone didn’t (completely) succumb to the SoaP effect. Yes, it was being hyped way before it was even officially announced in 2004, but the hype appears to have been justified. I mean, this is Apple we’re talking about. Look at how successful the iPod is and you’ll see what I’m talking about.

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A Safari for the rest of us

Web browsers are interesting things. Most people don’t even care which they use. If you have Windows, you use Internet Explorer. If you have a Mac, you use Safari. If you’re smart, you use Firefox. But the operating system barriers have been slowly breaking down. Internet Explorer can be installed on Mac OS, although the Mac version is outdated and fairly crappy. Now, however, you can install Safari, the formerly Mac-only browser, on Windows. Granted, it’s only a beta version (more like an alpha, as I’ll later explain), but you can still try it out if you so like.

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Vista annoyances

I’ve been using Windows Vista on my laptop for a couple months now, and I have to say it’s pretty awesome. A lot more so than I ever thought it would be, especially considering the anti-hype it was given leading up to and shortly following its release. Contrary to the claims you’ll usually find, I haven’t had problems running games, all the drivers are there and up-to-date (even for graphics), the UAC doesn’t bug me about every single thing, and finally, it doesn’t crash every five seconds.

However, as much as I love Vista, I have come across a few really, really annoying things. Some are directly tied in with the operating system, others are just by-products of incompatibility with certain software or hardware, and still others are just personal peeves. Luckily there aren’t many, so I’m sorry to disappoint if you were hoping for a solid Microsoft-bashing. I don’t cater to fanboys (or fangirls, for that matter).

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My love of Half-Life

I finally broke down and bought Half-Life 2 and Half-Life 2: Episode One. I’ve been holding off on both games until I got a computer capable of running them, and my current laptop fits the bill. This should really come as no surprise to any fans of the Half-Life series, but both games are amazing. Simply awesome.

If you aren’t already aware, Episode One is the first out of three installments of a new thing called episodic gaming. Essentially, take all three episodes, cram them together, and you’ve got Half-Life 3. Anyways, Episode One came out a while back and Episode Two is slotted for release later this year, so it’s not as if the games are coming out all rapid-fire like. They’re also fairly short. Episode One, for instance, had only about 5 hours of gameplay, compared to 30+ for most full-sized games. That’s the nature of episodic gaming.

While I absolutely loved Episode One, I can’t help but chafe at how short it was. Granted, it was only $10 off of Steam, but it felt like I was cut short in the story. Valve, the guys behind Half-Life, have said that the wait between Episodes One and Two was a lot longer than they were hoping, and that the time between Two and Three will be a lot shorter. Episodic gaming is, after all, a relatively new idea, unless you count sequels, which are something entirely different (in that the story in the second game doesn’t pick up immediately following the events of the first game).

Anyways, I originally meant this to kind of be a review of Episode One, but it kind of went off into a review of episodic gaming. I’m really no good at reviewing things. But I am good at whacking zombies with a crowbar, and that’s enough for me.

 

May 2012
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